The Supreme Court passed an order which states that disciplinary proceeding against an employee cannot continue after retirement of the employee. The SC has set aside the decision of the Allahabad High Court which validated the continuation of disciplinary proceedings against an employee of an organization falling under Uttar Pradesh government.

A bench of justices T S Thakur and C Nagappan which dealt with the provision in the Uttar Pradesh Co-operative Employees Service Regulations, 1975, said there is no provision in it for initiation or continuation of disciplinary proceeding after retirement nor there is any provision stating that in case misconduct is established a deduction could be made from his retrial benefits.

"Once the appellant had retired from service on March 31, 2009, there was no authority vested with the respondents for continuing the disciplinary proceeding even for the purpose of imposing any reduction in the retrial benefits payable to the appellant,” the bench said.

"In the absence of such an authority, it must be held that the enquiry had lapsed and the appellant was entitled to get full retrial benefits," the bench said.

"The appeals are, therefore, allowed and the judgement and order of the High Court are set aside and the respondents are directed to pay arrears of salary and allowances payable to the appellant and also to pay him his all the retrial benefits in accordance with the rules and regulations as if there had been no disciplinary proceeding or order passed therein," it said.

The Apex Court was dealing with an appeal filed by a man, against whom the disciplinary proceedings initiated in 2006 continued after his retirement in March 2009.

It directed the government department and UP Cooperative Institutional Service Board, Lucknow to give the retirement benefits to Dev Prakash Tewari and also arrears of salary and allowances during the period of his dismissal and up to the date of reinstatement.